It’s the news the penetration testers have all been long awaiting; Backtrack 4 final is here and now. Though many people, myself included, have been using various pre-release, beta release, and pre-final release flavors for almost a year now ever since first standing in line to hand over my usb stick to a group of elite hackers at Shmoocon 5, now there is no excuse. The final release is just in time for Hack or Halo at Shmoocon 6, saving me the trouble of making sure to update every tool I might possibly need before the big event.

So why does Backtrack rock in general? It’s basically most of the tools you will need for your pentest all rolled into one and set up nicely. I say most because it doesn’t have your commercial tools such as Nessus built in for obvious reasons, though it is possible to integrate your licensed Nessus into your Backtrack install. Ever been setting up Dradis for your first big pentesting gig at a new company on a recently imaged box? You’ve got your ruby prerequisites (rubydev, opensslruby, etc.), various gardening tools, SQLite, diamonds, garnets, and opals. At some point in the process of getting it all integrated, even your technically savvy individual may find himself ruing the day he decided it was a good idea to wait until the night before to build the pentest box. In Backtrack it goes like this:
root@bt4: cd /pentest/misc/dradis/server
root@bt4: ruby ./script/server
Done.

So why upgrade to Backtrack 4? First off, there’s the obvious perk of having the newest versions of all your favorite tools and some you’ve had on your list to check out for a while now. It also includes some new tools that have been developed in the interim since Backtrack 3 came out way back in summer of 2008, saving you the trouble of those pesky installs and svn checkouts. A great new tool that’s making its Backtrack debut on the final release of Backtrack 4 is re1ik’s social engineering toolkit (SET). Additionally, Backtrack 4 is Ubuntu based rather than Slackware based. While Backtrack 3 was great, your Ubuntu-based system has its perks as far as driver integration goes. As more and more people move from just the Live-CD Backtrack approach to using Backtrack as the base operating system on their pentesting boxes, this can only be a step in the right direction. Speaking of installation, Backtrack 4 final has an installation script that looks a lot like the GUI-based point-and-click installation wizards seen in system such as Ubuntu, resulting in a more hands-off approach than persistent changes in Backtrack 3.

The only drawback with Backtrack 4 as is that I can think of would be trying to write up your reports in Backtrack. Let’s not get into any holy war between writing in vi or nano, and just suffice to say it’s not easy. Backtrack 4 does come with Emacs, and some included tools such as Maltego make some pretty graphs. Plus, you can install OpenOffice on Backtrack, so it’s not that big of a drawback after all.
All in all, Backtrack 4 is the bomb, and if you haven’t jumped on the bandwagon, my advice is to get to it.

Georgia

3 thoughts on “Backtrack 4: The big cheese

  1. Daniel says:

    Hi Georgia,

    We know that setting up Dradis is not (yet) the easiest of the tasks, but we are working hard on making it much easier for the next releases! Ideas are always welcomed 😉

    Regards,

    Daniel

  2. who da leet haxor lol

  3. Thank you for taking the time to discuss this, I feel strongly about information and love learning more on this. If possible,it is extremely helpful for me.

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